Saturday 6 December 2008

法资企业的公关们又有的忙了

英国BBC等世界主流媒体都报道了法国总统萨尔科奇会见达赖的新闻。尽管中国方面早在之前就警告法国与达赖会晤的严重后果(会损害中法上百万的贸易往来)。但是这次萨尔科奇借着参加在波兰举行的欧洲9国峰会的契机,会见了不知道在那里干嘛的达赖。中方的反应是已经取消了上周在法国举行由发放牵头主办的欧盟-中国峰会。

BBC在此报道的正文显眼的位置引用了一名名为Zhang Wenguang对此的反应,以此来代表来自中国普通百姓的声音:"如果萨尔科奇真的会见了达赖喇嘛,我们将不会去家乐福,也不会购买任何法国商品了。"




"If Sarkozy really meets the Dalai Lama, we will not shop at Carrefour or buy French products again."
Zhang Mengguang



完整报道请见:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7769123.stm

显然,即法国在奥运前夕对于西藏问题的态度,以及中国之前的一轮由网路,短信上发起的反法浪潮后,欧洲方面已经意识到了中国目前的民族主义情绪的变化。相比这一则消息已经受到了国内法资企业以及各大公关公司的关注。相关应对应急措施以及启动。在我看来有实力的法资企业还是应该加强与中国政府的沟通与合作,积极参与由政府组织与开展的各大社会活动与公益活动。同时,在对中国客户的客户服务上面也不能怠慢。之前不少听到某些跨国公司对不同国家采取不同客户服务标准的新闻报道,如果在此段时刻在华法资企业出现类似报道更会引发国内抵法情绪。


Wednesday 30 April 2008

Carrefour China is in a huge trouble now

I put a post ‘political issues and other disasters’ previously, talking about the boycott issues happening in both real life and virtual world in China now.

I mentioned Carrefour China is boycotting by Chinese netizens. Now the crisis is getting worse. Several most famous Chinese searching engines, which including Google China and Yahoo China are boycotting Carrefour China now, by blocking all the web pages, news, even pictures and blogs regarding the term ‘Carrefour’ in Chinese. That is to say, if you want to search ‘家乐福’, you only can see are these:

"The following information might against the policies, are currently unavailable".























These are all top serching engines in China. Till now, none of them has made any comments on that.

Sunday 27 April 2008

Fatigue? What about this new feature?


Siggy posted ‘early signs of Facebok fatigue’, arguing whether social networking fad is going down. Three days later, this most popular social network site announced that IM (Instant Message) is now available to all Facebook members. It now begins to compete with the similar services offered by Yahoo message, MSN and Google Talk.

Now all Facebook users can see a chat bar at the bottom right corner of their page when they log on.

"Some distinct features of Facebook's integrated IM service include notification through sound and provision to view the Mini-Feed (updates) of a friend's profile page while chatting with them in real time. Moreover, the chat history isn't logged permanently."

Will this new launched service boost the number of new registration or hold all old users? Let’s wait and see.

“Hands on with Facebook Chat—timewasters only”

Friday 25 April 2008

RSS — a win-win technical tool for journalists and public relations practitioners






Siggy in his presentation and post talked about the RSS feed and its application in virtual world. Derek pointed out the profound influence on monitoring various discussions on the products and the organisation.

Since journalists all place higher expectations on speed of the information delivery and exchange, RSS feed exactly could meet their needs, especially the moment they are following an ongoing crisis in an organisation. We all understand the important role an online press room plays in crisis communication. But imagine if practitioners had online press room updated while journalists missed the message that practitioners trying to distribute.


In this way, neither of them had the benefits of online press room. Therefore, except understanding the benefits of RSS feeds by ourselves, we also should make effort to encourage journalists to subscribe RSS feeds to keep up-to-minute with every content change in organisational online press room.

Saturday 19 April 2008

Challenging Anonymous editing in WIKI

Using WIKI as an internal communication tool, which is a very innovative idea. (We have talked about this topic in class. Giota also posted an article in her blog). We argued that WIKI, to some extent, could be used as a substitute for traditional group discussion within an organisation, especially when group members have difficulties to gather together by geographical restrictions. Gioda mentioned many alternative ways using WIKI, such as resources, event news, collaborative discussion (Q&A), tracking coverage, schedule, tasks, meeting notes, project status, research results, contacts, team lists, and member profiles.

Here, I want to talk about WIKI with from an alternative perspective. WIKI in its website lists five foundation issues that are considered to be beyond debate. "Neutral point of view as the guiding editorial principle" is on top of the list.

"The neutral point of view attempts to present ideas and facts in such a fashion that both supporters and opponents can agree. Of course, 100% agreement is not possible; there are ideologues in the world who will not concede to any presentation other than a forceful statement of their own point of view. We can only seek a type of writing that is agreeable to essentially rational people who may differ on particular points."

However, the real world isn't that simple and perfect. A young man in the states therefore set up a website called WikiScanner when he heard about Congressmen getting caught for white-wahsing their WIKI pages.





"WikiScanner combines two databases: (1) The list of all IP adresses that have made edits to Wikipedia, and (2) What IP addresses belong to which companies. So with WikiScanner you can type a company name, and it shows you what edits have come from IP addresses owned by that company."

The founder of this site concluded three common kinds of vandalism when people using WIKI nonymouslly:

  1. Wholesale removal of entire paragraphs of critical information. (common for both political figures and corporations)
  2. White-washing -- replacing negative/neutral adjectives with positive adjectives that mean something similar. (common for political figures)
  3. Adding negative information to a competitor's page. (common for corporations)

So next time if some public relations people are required or even forced to make some unethical change some information on Wiki for your company’s or clients,just remember, you will be traced and be exposed to the public.

Wednesday 16 April 2008

Political Issues and other disasters



There are two new-borned websites are very popular among netizens in China. Interestingly, these two non-profit websites are both set up by average Chinese netizens to demonstrate their opinions towards the protest recently happened in Tibet and other related incidents.




One websites is http://www.anti-cnn.com/, which "is established to expose the lies and distortions" the American news network (and other western media organisations). But CNN is becoming the target since one of its archor Jack Cafferty appeared on The Situation Room, and called Chinese "goons and thugs" and said products manufactured in China are "junk". Another websites is aimed to raise a campaign to boycott Carrefour, the French retail giant, whose biggest shareholder— LVMH Group is accused to donate a huge amount of money to Dalai Lama.


The website http://www.anti-jialefu.cn/ has been created to demonstrate the boycott Carrefour, the second biggest retailor based in France. Emails, text messages are spreading among people in China, saying not go to Carrefour on 1 May and suggesting not purchase products under LVMH Group such as Christine Dior, Louis Vuitton, etc.

Public relations people in Carrefour China responded quickly when asking organisational attitude towards the f Li Jing, head of public relations for Carrefour’s Shanghai branch, said the company was investigating the situation. Yesterday, a statement released by Eric Legros, the CEO of Carrefour China appeased on media outlets online and almost all the popular websites in China.

The statement stresses the goal of Carrefour is to promote economical and cultural development across the world. Carrefour has and will never do any things which might hurt Chinese people. The statement denies "the support to certain illegal non-government organisation(s)". At the end of the statement, Eric mentioned he and the CEO of Carrefour Group are fully support of Beijing Olympic Games 2008 and are expecting to attend the opening ceremony in Beijing.

From a public relations perspective, the reaction from Carrefour is fast and effective. Public relations practitioners in Carrefour were aware of the problem and the different voices from the virtual world. They responded to the rumour very quickly.

There is a growing tendency towards utilising ICT (Information & Communion Technology), such as websites, mobile phones, PDA as a tool in crisis communication. In my opinion, public relations people with Carrefour China could do a little bit more, such as setting up "online media centre" to better satisfy journalists. Gernerally speaking, the section incorporates important contact numbers, all the news releases, CSR report (corporate social responsibility), images and videos together. These could be used as supplementary information to support Carrefour’s statement and stand.

Monday 7 April 2008

BA Terminal 5 chaos, so does BA PR?

A high-tech, hassle free travel experience in Heathrow Terminal 5 turned out to be a nightmare to all the passengers.







Telegraph has already listed the chaos in the list of top PR blunders.



"It was a PR disaster', Telegraph comments, "the airline and airport appeared to be blaming each other for the emerging chaos".


And "according to BA insiders, the airline's press officers working out of the company's Waterside headquarters were not trying to spin their way out of bad news".


"The sad truth is they had as little idea of what was going on at Terminal 5 about a mile away as the passengers who were engulfed in the shambles itself."





Finally, BA's CEO, Willie Walsh appeared on TV to apologize the current mass, who performed far better than his colleague Gareth Kirkwood, the airline's director of operations, who was described as "the original rabbit dazzled by the headlights".


"He read a statement and then scuttled off at some speed, accompanied by his minder, refusing to take any questions".


In this case, BA's website and its online press centre within in play an important role. The link of updated information is on the home page. Passengers are advised to check latest arrivals and departures information before they travel to the airport.


Speaking of its online press centre, however, news are not updated on daily basis. Specific tactics dedicated to the crisis are not well stated to journalist. Therefore, they could not blame journalists for using their own angles to tell stories.

Saturday 29 March 2008

Chris Anderson, the author of The Long Tail, posted an article titled "Sorry PR People: You're Blocked". He complained that he received over 300 emails everyday from lazy PR people who simply click send button without thinking whom they want to target.

"So fair warning: I only want two kinds of email: those from people I know, and those from people who have taken the time to find out what I'm interested in and composed a note meant to appeal to that (I love those emails; indeed, that's why my email address is public). "

"Everything else gets banned on first abuse. The following is just the last month's list of people and companies who have been added to my Outlook blocked list. All of them have sent me something inappropriate at some point in the past 30 days. Many of them sent press releases; others just added me to a distribution list without asking. If their address gets harvested by spammers by being published here, so be it--turnabout is fair play."

He did list a looooooooong email address alphabetically. I guess a lot of PR people did check whether themselves or their organisations’ email addressed had been blocked.

Morgan McLintic in his blog mentioned an amusing post by Andrew Conry-Murray excessive press release which follows most virus outbreaks.

"A new product is available to block press releases that invariably follow malware outbreaks. ShuTup 1.0 stops 100 percent of press releases that tell you how a product automatically and proactively blocks the latest worm, virus, spyware, phishing, or 'bot attack. "

"ShuTup 1.0, which is launching this week, is aimed at security professionals, IT administrators, journalists, and editors. These markets suffer crushing volumes of e-mail in the wake of the threat-du-jour."

ShuTup 1.0 maybe launched in the near future since a lot of people are getting sick of these "spams". Clicking the send button is a very easy thing to do, which makes some of PR people won't bother to select addresses from the whole list. There is another possibility that these PR people think maybe, maybe someone else such as Chris Anderson, would interested in the topics. Unfortunately, Chris' answer is "sorry, you are blocked".

If these PR people really want to target the right people, online pressroom could be an effective aid tool. One of the advantages of using online pressroom is that news release will be well in control. And those journalists who are really interested in your organisations could easily find information they want.

Monday 24 March 2008

A New Word-of-Mouth Era

According to the statistics produced by CNNIC (China Internet Network Information Centre), the number of Chinese internet user is more than 210 million by the end of 2007, an increase of 48 million in last six months.


(Sources from: CNNIC, Statistical Survey Report on the Internet Development in China (January 2008), available: http://www.cnnic.cn/uploadfiles/pdf/2008/2/29/104126.pdf )

According to 18th Statistical Survey Report on the Internet Development in China (July 2006), 43.2% net citizens often use BBS and engage in different kinds of discussion groups, which mean more than 90 million people in China, play active roles in BBS. As can be seen the statistics below, BBS users are even larger than the users of IM (42.7%), which enables BBS to be the communication platform following after emails.



(Sources from CNNIC, available: http://www.cnnic.cn/download/2006/18threport-en.pdf)

It seems that BBS still plays an important role in Chinese internet life. Actually, the influence of BBS also reflects on net citizens’ life in real world. A report on the Internet mentioned that a growing number of people begin reading comments on the different kinds of forums when they are interested in a certain product or service. A new word-of-mouth era comes!

Since BBS is a topic-centric communication platform, people can easily google topics what they are interested in and engage in the discussion. There are hundreds of thousands of people take part in any kinds of topics you can or cannot image. People share their opinions and experiences of certain products and services; they complained about low quality products and awful services they experienced.

Internet expends word-of-mouth influence. Not only marketing people have to pay attention on word-of-mouth strategy, practitioners really need to think about it. There are a lot of work need PR people to do: How to locate those opinion leaders online? How to maintain the mutual relations with those people? How to engage in the discussion? How to monitor related topics?

Sunday 9 March 2008

From Push to Pull Media Strategy?

Hilary talks about the push and pull technology applied in mobile phones, which reminds me that these two words “push” and “pull” could also be used to describe public relations media strategy.

According to Wiki,

the business terms push and pull originated in the marketing and advertising world. The push/pull relationship is that between a product or piece of information and who is moving it. A customer 'pulls' things towards themselves, while a producer 'pushes' things toward customers.

When these two terms are applied in PR world, they are used to describe two ways that practitioners get their messages across. Practitioners use push media strategy by sending emails and making calls to media organisations or more directly the journalists, to get their message publicized. The pull media strategy owes its creation to the rapid development of organisational websites with 'press room' section, which provides an alternative way to appeal to journalists and draw public attention.

As per the discussion on Thursday regarding “the online press centre”, it was argued that journalists would not be spending a great deal of time searching for news since they could get loads of information by receiving calls and emails. In other words, traditional (push) media strategy dominates till date. Therefore, the main purposes for journalists visiting organisations’ online press room still remains for searching basic information like fact sheets, backgrounds of chief executive, contact number of PR office.

It seems that pull media strategy still has a long way to go.

Thursday 28 February 2008

DO BACKUP!!!

I lost my phone the day before yesterday, on my way back home, which can be categorized as a smart phone according to Hilary's presentation on "Mobile Technologies and Public Relations."

As Hilary mentioned in the presentation, smart phone is more than the basic calling and messaging function. A smart phone is like a PDA, you can install some very useful software in it, for example, I have an very helpful English-Chinese dictionary, a notebook, a PDF reader, Quickoffice, which including Word, Execl and PPT. Now, whenever I pick up the phone trying to use these functions, I realized this phone is no longer that fancy phone I have cherished for four year, it is now just the cheapest one I could get from the shop. I know I haven't got used to it. Shoot!

And actually it is not only about how much money I wasted, it is also about all the contact numbers I lost. Double shoot! The worst thing is...I haven't backed up all these information, which is the thing really bother me, telling all my family members and friends my new number. Now I realize how important to backup information, Derek.

So, if you know me, please do me a favor of sending me your contact information so that I can re-enter it. I promise I'll back up my phone more regularly.

DO BACKUP, CLASSMATES, AS LONG AS YOU THINK THESE INFORMATION ARE IMPORTANT TO YOU!


Well, I know have to move on. I dedicated this posting to my lost NOKIA 6681

Sunday 24 February 2008

Welcome to Sherry's PR Fantasy

It seems that I have to say goodbye to old MySpace blog for a while. From now on, I have to concentrate on Blogger for the sake of marks :)

The creation of this blog is for the assessment of the module of Public Relations and Technology. And I am also intent to use this blog as an idea exchange platform for anyone who is interested in the impact of technology on both the theory and practice of public relations.

The rapid development of technology changed the definition of have and have-nots to some extent. If the old the division only focus on the wealth factor, the new definition of have and have-nots also represent the ownership of a new skill or knowledge. Well, I made the decision to stand by the “have” side because the understanding of cross-discipline module is extremely important for our future career. I will keep posting interesting topics on PR and technology, o.k., I know, Dr. Hodge, this is compulsory to complete this module.

Anyway, there are some fascinating ideas come to my mind, I have to google some information. I will see you soon.